Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2024)

The General Movement Optimality Score-Revised (GMOS-R) with Socioeconomically Stratified Percentile Ranks

  • Christa Einspieler,
  • Arend F. Bos,
  • Alicia J. Spittle,
  • Natascia Bertoncelli,
  • Marlette Burger,
  • Colleen Peyton,
  • Moreno Toldo,
  • Fabiana Utsch,
  • Dajie Zhang,
  • Peter B. Marschik

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13082260
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
p. 2260

Abstract

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Background: The general movement optimality score (GMOS) quantifies the details of general movements (GMs). We recently conducted psychometric analyses of the GMOS and developed a revised scoresheet. Consequently, the GMOS-Revised (GMOS-R) instrument necessitated validation using new percentile ranks. This study aimed to provide these percentile ranks for the GMOS-R and to investigate whether sex, preterm birth, or the infant’s country of birth and residence affected the GMOS-R distribution. Methods: We applied the GMOS-R to an international sample of 1983 infants (32% female, 44% male, and 24% not disclosed), assessed in the extremely and very preterm period (10%), moderate (12%) and late (22%) preterm periods, at term (25%), and post-term age (31%). Data were grouped according to the World Bank’s classification into lower- and upper-middle-income countries (LMICs and UMICs; 26%) or high-income countries (HICs; 74%), respectively. Results: We found that sex and preterm or term birth did not affect either GM classification or the GMOS-R, but the country of residence did. A lower median GMOS-R for infants with normal or poor-repertoire GMs from LMICs and UMICs compared with HICs suggests the use of specific percentile ranks for LMICs and UMICs vs. HICs. Conclusion: For clinical and scientific use, we provide a freely available GMOS-R scoring sheet, with percentile ranks reflecting socioeconomic stratification.

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